2018
DOI: 10.46743/1082-7307/2018.1439
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The British Art of Colonialism in India: Subjugation and Division

Abstract: This article utilizes a three-pronged analytical model to examine the mechanics of British colonialism and its socioeconomic and political consequences in India. Those three elements are divide and rule, colonial education, and British laws. The British took some reformative initiatives that ostensibly deserve appreciation such as the development of a predictable legal system, investment in infrastructure development, and education in the late nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries. However, most colonial poli… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In India, the British model was sustained through divide and rule, colonial education and discriminatory laws promoting direct, structural and cultural violence (Rahman et al, 2018). The main reason for employing divide and rule was that the British realised it was hard to gain control when people were united.…”
Section: Colonialism and Casteismmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In India, the British model was sustained through divide and rule, colonial education and discriminatory laws promoting direct, structural and cultural violence (Rahman et al, 2018). The main reason for employing divide and rule was that the British realised it was hard to gain control when people were united.…”
Section: Colonialism and Casteismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Indian subcontinent remained colonised for over 200 years (Lyer, 2010). Some of the elements employed by the British model on their former British colonies were found in the form of 'control over land, divide and rule, apartheid laws, ethnocentrism, education and language, religious suppression, native inferiority and trauma' (Byrne et al, 2018) In India, the British model was sustained through divide and rule, colonial education and discriminatory laws promoting direct, structural and cultural violence (Rahman et al, 2018). The main reason for employing divide and rule was that the British realised it was hard to gain control when people were united.…”
Section: Colonialism and Casteismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There was now a third major cultural group in Indiathe one who had left their traditional religious practices and adopted the British religious code; they were called 'Anglicized Indians.' Such a mixed breed of British Indians was under the strong influence of Christianity (Rahman et al, 2018).…”
Section: Education In Indo-pak and The Western Influencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, it is an exploration of methods to decolonize countries and minds. It further discusses the immediate need for the application of these methods, especially in the lands and people who were colonized like in Africa and the Indian sub-continent (Nicholls, 2011) (Rahman & Ali, 2018). Since the concurring and colonization of the world at the hands of Europeans (Matin, 2012), Euro centrism emerged in almost all spheres of life.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%